Robert Wikeford
Robert Wikeford or de Wikeford (1330 – 29 August 1390) was an English-born diplomat, lawyer and judge, who became Lord Chancellor of Ireland and Archbishop of Dublin.
Early career
He was born at Wickford in Essex, where his family are said to have been Lords of the Manor of Wickford Hall.[1] He was a fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and on his death bequeathed the College his altar cloths. He became a clerk in the English Chancery, and was appointed Archdeacon of Winchester in 1368.[2]
He was clearly a man of considerable diplomatic and military ability, and was entrusted by King Edward III with a number of diplomatic missions, notably to Count Louis II of Flanders, Joanna, Duchess of Brabant and King Peter IV of Aragon. In 1373 he was made Constable of Bordeaux and then joined with the Seneschal in the government of Aquitaine. The King referred to Wikeford as "our beloved clerk",[3] and he is described as Doctor of both laws.[4]
O'Flanagan[5] records that in 1375 the royal judges in Aquitaine, Sir Guy de Bryan and Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, in a lawsuit brought by Ivo Beausteau against Wikeford, gave judgement against him without hearing him in his own defence and imposed financial penalties of great severity on him. Wikeford appealed to the King in Council, and the King immediately ordered the judgement to be cancelled.[6][7] This episode suggests that Wikeford, though a valued Crown servant, was not popular.
He was also sued by another Royal clerk called Thomas who obtained judgment against him for £10 (a large sum in the fourteenth century) shortly before his translation to Dublin.[8] To Wikeford's embarrassment, Thomas was permitted to issue a writ to distrain any lands held by the Archbishop in Ireland in satisfaction of the judgment.[9]
Irish career
In 1375 Wickford became Archbishop of Dublin and a year later he was made Lord Chancellor of Ireland. O'Flanagan[10] believes (despite the lack of written records for this period) that he was a gifted and conscientious Chancellor; in addition to his judicial business he undertook a vast range of official duties, including the holding of a Parliament at Castledermot. He was granted the manor of Swords, north of Dublin, and the right to hold a fair there. In 1381 he arranged for the grant of a clerical subsidy by the Irish clergy.[11] He presided over the session of Parliament which was held at Naas in 1382/3.[12] The following year he visited England on official business.
He ceased to be Chancellor about 1385, due it was said to his bitter quarrels with the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Sir Philip Courtenay, and with the powerful Butler dynasty, headed by James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond.[13] Courtenay complained about Wikeford to the King. Unlike his grandfather Edward III, Richard did not especially value Wikeford's services to the Crown, and censured him severely for exceeding his powers. [14] What the explanation for the feud is not entirely clear, although Wikeford had already clashed with the Butlers, whose power and influence he apparently resented. Courtenay had a reputation for being rash, angry and temperamental, and from what we know about Wikeford he seems to have been rather similar in character.[15]
As he aged his duties as Primate became increasingly onerous. As early as 1383 he petitioned the Crown to be allowed to return to England, but was refused, on the ground that due to his knowledge of Irish affairs his services were still required there. In 1390 he was given leave to return to England for a year in the hope of improving his health, but he died in England on 29 August of that year.[16]
Character
O'Flanagan praises him as a wise and learned judge and a man of great ability,[17] and Willis gives a similarly favourable verdict. As Archbishop he was praised as being active and judicious in his management of the See of Dublin. [18]However, the summary judgment given against him in his Aquitainian lawsuit, without Wikeford being allowed to speak in his own defence, suggests that he had numerous enemies. As Lord Chancellor his quarrels with the Lord Lieutenant and the Earl of Ormond earned him a severe rebuke from King Richard II.[19].As Archbishop he showed the harsher side of his character by expelling all beggars from his diocese in 1376, despite protests that many of them, so far from being "idle vagabonds", had worked hard on the restoration of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, in the time of Wikeford's predecessor Thomas Minot.[20]
Sources
- Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 London John Murray 1926
- O'Flanagan, Roderick. J. Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of Ireland London 1870
- Rhodes, Walter Eustace (1900). Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 61. London: Smith, Elder & Co. . In
References
- O'Flanagan, J. Roderick Lives of the Lord Chancellors of Ireland (London 1870)
- Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 (John Murray, London 1926)
- D'Alton, John "Memoirs of the Archbishops of Dublin" (Hodges and Smith, Dublin 1838)
- Gascon Rolls, C 61/86: 40, 41, 45 (Gascon Rolls Project)
- Lives of the Chancellors
- D'Alton "Archbishops of Dublin"
- Gascon Rolls, C61/88: 86, C61/89: 7 (Gascon Rolls Project).
- "Archbishops of Dublin"
- "Archbishops of Dublin"
- Lives of the Chancellors
- Wills, James The Irish Nation: Its History and Biography Published by A. Fullerton London 1860
- Wills The Irish Nation
- Saul, Nigel editor, Fourteenth Century England Vol. 5 The Boydell Press 2008 p.101
- Saul p101
- Saul p.101
- Wills The Irish Nation
- Lives of the Chancellors
- Willis The Irish Nation
- Saul p101
- D'Alton Archbishops of Dublin